N. S. Cafe 139 South 11th Hardy Smith Barber Shop WE USE A CLEAN TURKISH TOWEL ON EACH CUSTOMER WITH AUTOMATIC STERILIZER AT EACH CHAIR EIGHT CHAIRS BOYD will lo your PRINTING RIGHT 125 North 12th St. '-I V. Op; The Daily Nebraskan UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA OFFICIAL PUBLICATION EDITORIAL STAFF Gaylord Davis Editor-in-Chief Howard Murfin Managing Editor Jack Landale News Editor Clarence Haley Acting News Editor Ruth Snyder Associate Editor Kenneth McCandless Sports Editor Helen Giltner Soclet7 Editor BUSINESS STAFF Glen H. Gardner Business Manager Roy Wythers Assistant Business Manager REPORTORI AL STAFF Patricia Maloney Gayle Vincent Grubb Marian Henninger Story Harding Sadie Finch Edith Howe Mary Herzing Le Ross Hammond Genevieve Loeb Offices: News, Basenrent, University Hall; Business, Basement, Administration Building. Telephones: News and Editorial, B-2S16; Business, B-2597. Night, all Departments, B 4204. Published every day except Saturday and Sunday during the col lege year. Subscription, per semester, $1. . Entered at the postofflce at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second-class mail Matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. PHYSICAL TRAINING FOR UNIVERSITY STUDENTS Inter-fraternity athletic contests are the nearest approach to the inter-mural system that we have yet seen in the middle west. State universities as a class are very slow to adopt the idea. As far as the state institutions are concerned, no real test of the uni versal athletic plan has been made. We are left to judge of its merits by the success attained in a few schools, and by the interest taken in the near-attempts that are made at our own institution. Little interest has been shown outside of strictly fraternity cir cles, toward the inter-fraternity tournament now in progress. Few of the participants have demonstrated much enthusiasm. The games are attended by a small gathering of those immediately concerned. The players do not get into the game for the physical exercise they may get, but merely because they think it their duty to the frater nity. They dread to think of the stiff muscles that the exertion will produce on 'the day following. No joy or zest is taken in the games. Few non-fraternity people know that such a tournament is actually in progress. University students generally are in a state of physical apathy. They do not appear ready to accept or take advantage of a system of inter-mural athletics, designed for the development of their physical being. They enjoy watching a football game from the grand stand. They applaud the display of physical prowess on the gridiron, and are keenly interested in the battle of physical strength. They do not, however, have any desire to get on the field them- , selves, and actively take part in the game. They are too lazy for j that. The physical exertion necessitated is abhorred. ( Students need to be awakened to the realization that they must J lobk to the physical side of their education as well as to the men- j tal. Enough has been said on the necessity of bodily soundness. It is not necessary to have the body of a Hercules, but it is quite j necessary to have a body that functions properly, and one that can j digest, and take care of three meals a day. It is unnecessary to i look to the football field for the development of such a body. It , can be developed in the gymnasium, or "indeed within the con fines of one's own room, quite as well. Thysical training should be compulsory for every university student, and with the advantages of an inter-mural system such as has been outlined in our columns before, no student would object to such compulsion. Every student would be examined for the pur pose of determining the type of athletics which would be most bene ficial for him. It might be football for one, golf for another, bas ketball for a third, and tennis for a fourth. Interest in one's own body would be enlivened, and the prevailing spirit of apathy would be buried. Football, basketball; even inter-fraternity contests, do not solve the problem. The final solution to arousing the interest of every student, is to get each one interested in HIS OWN BODY, and not in the some one's else. He admires the muscles of the trained athlele, but that doesn't materially benefit him. What we need is the universal plan, which gives to each individual student the benefit of physical training as administered by competent di rectors in scientific doses, suited to the individual needs of each one. FOREIGN STUDENTS IN SWITZERLAND When the war broke out, there were several thousand foreign students in the universities of Switzerland. Over half of these were women. They represented some thirty nations, including all the belligerents. Suddenly hundreds of these students found themselves cut off from all means of getting either news or money. Before long the number of foreign students in Switzerland was increased by many Russian students who had been in other coun tries and who fled for refuge to peaceful Switzerland. The refugees arrived without much except the clothes in which they traveled. There are now some five hundred refugee university students in Switzerland not only Russians, but also Poles, Czechs, Croats, Serbs, Greeks, French and Belgians. The Russians have steadily re fused tempting loans or subsidies offered by the Bolsheviki, say ing, "We would die first." As to the men students, the secretaries of the Student Christian Federation in Switzerland are constantly asked, "Why do they not go home to fight?" And as to the women, "Why do they not seek work?" To most of these men and women a return home has been impossible, first, because of the enemy countries lying between Switzerland and their homeland, and, second, as In Russia, because of the dreadful change in the homeland itself. Moreover, the men students are mainly those who, on physical grounds, have been re fused for military service. Men and women alike have aimed at self-support, but employment has been hard to find. The appeal to American generosity is, first of all, to give food to these students. The Student Christian Federation is helping the foreign stu dents in Switzerland materially and spiritually. Students In this country might well aid this work. Contrlbutionhs to it from them and others should be sent to Mr. B. H. Fancher, treasurer of the International Committee of Young Mn Christian Assoe:uun. 347 Madison avenue. New York City. GARMENT CLEANING SERVICE LINCOLN CLEANING AND DYE WORKS 326 South 11th Fine Chocolates FILLERS RESORPTION HARM AC Y Fraternities GROCERY AND MEAT BILL Let us explain A-Z plan of saving to organizations using large quantities of eatables. J. A. Mize Co. 1026 P Street. Tel. B-3299. All Reliable Coals Can Be Purchased From The Whitebreast Coal and Lumber Company Try Eureka or White breat for Money Savers Established 1887 Phone B-1422 HEFFLEY'S TAILORS 138 North Eleventh FENTON B. FLEMING THE JEWEL SHOP 1211.0 Street, LINCOLN NEB. HAVE YOUR ARMY OVERCOAT DYED BLACK AT THE EVANS fr-2311 827-833 N 12th 81 Central Shining Parlor Work Guaranteed Hat Klockin? a Specialty 116 NORTH 13TH STREET Quality is comomy' C. H. FREY Florist 1133 O St. Phones B-6741-6742 Have your Dress Suits CLEANED AND PRESSED. We Call for and Deliver FRATERNITY CLEANERS AND DYERS 222 South 13th. L-9771 MEN'S AND BOYS' STORE BUY IT AT APMQTPnMn ri hthinp. rn We are Intesested in Getting iter Print From Your Films We develop any Roll Film for KELLER Photo Supplies 141" North Thirteeth Streets tutxcixr SOCIAL EVENTS February 28. Kappa chapter of Chi Omega held its annual formal party at the Lincoln hotel. Seventy-five couples attended. The decorations and refreshments were carried out in the fraternity col ors, cardinal and straw. Little Betty Ann Murray and Jane Burgess gave out the programs. The chaperones, patrons and patronesses were: Gov ernor and Mrs. S. R. McKelvie, Sen ator and Mrs. E. C. Huston, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Doyle, Mr, and Mrs. O. B. Clark, Professor and Mrs. Sealock, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sanford, Mrs. Jessie Doyle Murray, Miss Mary Annette An derson, Mr. George W. Little, and Miss Amanda Heppner. The freshmen of PI Beta Phi enter tained thirty couples at a St. Patrick's house dance. Miss Carson, the prov ince president, was a guest. Mrs. Eb erly and Mrs. Atkinson chaperoned the party. The freshmen of Phi Gamma Delta entertained thirty couples at a bouse dance. The chaperones were Mrs. S. S. Hadley and Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Kim balL Thirty couples were guests of Sigma Phi Epsilon at a house dance. Lieu tenant Westerman of Rushville was a guest. Twenty couples attended the house dance given by Delta Delta Delta. Miss Agnes Bigger of Corning, la., and Miss Clara Pegler of Bluefleld, Neb were out-of-town guests. Mrs. Ida Hill and Mr. and Mrs. B. Green chaperoned the party. March 1. Alpha Sigma Phi entertained at a bouse dance for twenty couples. . Sigma Nu entertained twenty-fire couples at a house dance. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dobsoa, MUa Laurene Bratt and Mr. Ernest Kenny chaperoned the party. The rmtof-town nnti were Maor, Hedges Panama, Frank Par sons of Omaha and Sidney Goodfellow of Greenwood. Gamma Phi Beta neld its annual banquet at the Lincoln hotel. Brown and mauve, the sorority colors, were used in the decorations. Miss Eleanor Frampton acted as toastmistress. The toast list was as follows: "The Carna tion," Jean Hudson; "The Crescent," Effie Starbuck; "The Open Book," Delia Cobb; "The Lighted Lamp," Vi ola Kleinke; "The Shield," Sylvia Propes. The alumnae present were Mrs. Harry Campbell, Mrs. Leland Lan ders, and Miss Kate Helzer, Valentine; Miss Florence Jenks, Avoka, la.; Miss Sylvia Prokes, Schuyler, Neb.; Miss Ruth Irvine, Wayside, Kansas; Miss Caroline Kimball, David City, and Miss Doris Weaver, Sioux City, la. PI Kappa Phi entertained at a to. mal dancing party at the Lincoln ho tel. The program of dances was en Joyed by saventy-flve couples. Yellow and white, the colors of the fraternity, were carried out in the decorations and in the refreshments. Professor and Mrs. E. H. Barbour, Mr. and Mrs. Ar thur Paige, Professor and Mrs. E. R. Martin and Mr. and Mrs. John Ros bourough chaperoned the dancers. The out-of-town guests were Mr. R. W. Ford, Bertrand; Mr. J. D. Davis, Oma ha; Mr. J. D. Sherman, Argo, S. D.;: and Mr. E. M. Catterson, Sutton. Chi Omega gave Its annual banquet-, at the Lincoln hotel. Fifty-five active -and alumnae members were present.. The tables were decorated with bas kets of yellow jonquils. The owl-shaped ' menus contained the following toast' list:. "Why I Am Toastmistress," Beatrice Koch; "In the Front Line Trenches," Meryl Hardin; "Sights -I: Have Seen," Edith Cash; "Who's Who," Lulu Haskell; "I've Been Think ing," Helen Stuby. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Frances Hosec, Omaha; Miss Helen Scott, Stromsber; Mlsa Myrtle Fisher, Norfolk; Miss Leona McLean, Dennlson, la.; Mrs. Betty Denman, Adams; Miss Mildred Adams and Mrs. Vera Adams Davis, Omaha; Mlis Beatrice Koch. Rising City; MM Violet Summs, Aurora. Delta Chi entertained twenty cou ples at a house dance. Mr. and Mrs.. Merle Wade were chaperones.